political rhetoric• Rome shocked me by flouting the conventionalpolitical rhetoric of environmentalists.• Coming in the midst of a presidential campaign, the air attack has generated the inevitablepolitical rhetoric, bombast and pressure.• All the noise being made about the hostages at that time was just political rhetoric.• As democracy is, at present, the only permissiblepolitical rhetoric, the rulingclass duly speaks its language.• We should now cast aside all the political rhetoric of the campaign.• All the political rhetoric about big government protecting the weak and the poor is coming into question as well.• But how are we to cut through the political rhetoric to see what lies behind the disagreement?• This political rhetoric would lead one to suppose that the subsequentproposals would be of an equally clear political substance.
Originrhetoric
(1300-1400)Old Frenchrethorique, from Latin, from Greekrhetorike, from rhetor“public speaker”, from eirein“to say, speak”